You need to be logged in to the tutor2u Teacher Forums before you can add or view blog favorites. Return to article | View my favorites

Does the balance of payments matter anymore?

I have reached that time of the year when the dust is wiped from my balance of payments notes, charts are refreshed and my A2 group delve into the trade figues for different countries and ask the age old question, does it really matter if there are sizeable balance of payments imbalances?

The huge variations in the scale of current account deficits and surpluses from within the body of OECD countries seems to make this debate a live one again. Iceland’s financial crisis, the external deficits of many central and eastern european countries just a few years after their accession to the EU single market. And the continuing debate about the economics of the cavernous trade imbalances between China and the United States persuade me that ignoring the current account is a dangerous game.

As part of the discussion I have drawn some recent data from the OECD World Economic Outlook (November 2008) and a short glossary piece from the excellent Economist website. This is available below should colleagues wish to use and amend for their own students.

Student handout (word format)
Is_there_such_a_thing_as_a_balance_of_payments_crisis.doc

Add this entry to my favorites

Most recent entries

Categories

Monthly Archives

Tags

aqa economics, asa2 economics revision workshops 20102011, blogs, british library, business studies, business studies cpd, business teacher, business teacher national conference 2010, case studies, collaboration, competition, cpd, cpd for business studies, creative thinking, demand, diane abbott, ebea, economic wellbeing, economics, economics cpd, economics exam technique, economics inset, economics q&a;economics revision, economics review, economics revision, economics teaching, economics today, economics vle, economist, edexcel economics, employment, enterprise, enterprise week, entrepreneur, eternships.com, euro, evaluation, fraser doherty, games-based learning, gcse economics, give it a go, global economic, globalisation, google docs, housing, i am learning, inflation, innovation, investment, kerboodle, kirsty henshaw, latte, latte magazine, lobby magazine, make your mark, manufacturing, moodle, nelson thornes, nelson thornes aqa, ocr economics, pay, philip allan, philip allan updates, phonics, plenaries, plenary activities, politics conference, politics teacher, price, prices, rachel bridge, rajeeb dey, rapid revision, recession, revision, revision workshops, rory sutherland, sam learning, sir terry leahy, sophi tranchell, starter activities, starters, startup, sterling, supply, survey, tbble, teachecon, teaching gcse economics, teaching resources, tesco plc, thinking skills, tutor2u, unemployment, vle, work related learning, worthenshaws, zondle,
All tags

Syndicate